Examples Of Contextual Injustices In Virginia Woolf

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Virginia Woolf Essay
Through her texts, Virginia Woolf is able to challenge the injustices she perceived within her society, yet her arguments endure and encourage her audience to question injustices within their own unique contexts.The audience is able to reach valuable understandings about the way Woolf perceived injustices within her context, a period of change for the roles of women, through the construction, content, and language of A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas. Both texts aim to challenge ideas and encourage change in the social structures of their individual contexts, yet remain relevant even within the present day.

Woolf uses a Modernist stream-of-consciousness style throughout the novel; this allows Woolf to confront a variety of values and ideas, strengthening her argument as her audience contemplates both Woolf’s contextual injustices and their own. Woolf uses an extended metaphor of fishing to acknowledge the distractedness of her text at …show more content…

She uses patriotic language of several different groups to draw a comparison between patriarchal society and dictatorships. Woolf uses an intertextual reference from the Lord Chief Justice of England to show how ingrained both patriarchy and patriotism are within her society: “England is the home of democratic institutions… it is true that in our midst there are many enemies of liberty. [England is] a castle that will be defended to the last man.” Woolf compares this view to that of the uneducated woman and demeans patriotism, mocking the love man has for the country that has mistreated women: “‘Our country,’ she will say, ‘throughout the greater part of its history has treated me as a slave; it has denied me education or any share in its possessions.’ (...) ‘In fact, as a woman, I have no country.’” This use of rhetoric forces the audience to consider the correlation between patriarchy and patriotism in all

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